Tech Today: Verizon Prepares for Tiered Data Plans

Verizon Prepares for Tiered Data Plans: Kudos to All Things D for packaging the news and the reader takeaway in the headline: “If You Want That Verizon Data Plan, You Really Need to Hurry.”

The wireless company is making good on an earlier statement by Verizon Vice President Nicola Palmers that “unlimited billing on data is simply unsustainable for the industry,” and turning off the spigot for new customers.

Droid Life reports that the plans range from $30 a month for 2GB of data to $80 for 10GB. It says that the plans go into effect on July 7. [All Things D, Droid Life]

RIM Loses Another Exec: The Blackberry maker’s vice president of digital marketing is leaving the company for Samsung Telecommunications of America. Brian Wallace is the latest senior departure from a marketing department that over the last several months has lost its chief marketing officer and vice president of brand marketing. Last week one of RIM’s three chief operating officers, Don Morrison, left on medical leave. The departure comes at a challenging time for RIM. Shares fell to five year lows following the release of disappointing second-quarter results. [WSJ]

Japanese Supercomputer is Number One…For Now: The government funded supercomputer performs more than eight quadrillion calculations per second, enough to make it more powerful than the next five fastest computer systems combined. The leaders of the $1.25 billion project say that they hope to use the computer for real world applications including drug breakthroughs, renewable energy and earthquake prediction. Meanwhile IBM is working on a computer capable of 10 quadrillion calculations per second. [WSJ]

Apps Surpass Web Use: Congratulations are in order for all of us logging time staring at our smartphones while on the subway, crossing the street, or waiting at the restaurant for our date to show up. Data analysis company Flurry says daily time spent in mobile apps now surpasses time on the Web. Today the average user spends 9% more time using mobile apps than the Internet. And the app type of choice? Games. [Flurry]

Dropbox Accidentally Goes Password-Less: A bug at file-storage site Dropbox meant that anyone could log in to any account with any password for a while yesterday. As in, you could just type in anything in the password field and get access to an account. Dropbox says it fixed the problem. [Pastbin, Dropbox]